Richfield Oil Co. of California v. Hercules Gasoline Co.

297 P. 73, 112 Cal. App. 431, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1143
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1931
DocketDocket No. 7742.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 297 P. 73 (Richfield Oil Co. of California v. Hercules Gasoline Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richfield Oil Co. of California v. Hercules Gasoline Co., 297 P. 73, 112 Cal. App. 431, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1143 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

Plaintiff sued for an injunction and for an accounting. The interveners entered the litigation for the aid of plaintiff. Judgment went for plaintiff and interveners, awarding them a permanent injunction and damages. The defendants appeal upon a bill of exceptions.

Plaintiff and one Horwitz executed a written contract whereby the former agreed to purchase and the latter agreed to sell and deliver the crude oil which Horwitz might produce from a certain well being sunk in the Alamitos Heights district. Deliveries were to be made from the tanks of the owner located on the property to which the oil company was permitted to connect its pipe-lines. A maximum daily and monthly delivery was fixed by the contract and the price agreed to be paid for the oil was the market price as determined by “the prices per barrel publicly offered by the Standard Oil Company of California at dates of delivery . . . for oil of like gravity and quality”. A special price of ten cents a barrel below market was fixed for the first fifty thousand barrels delivered.

Horwitz deeded the property in fee simple to the defendant Clark after he had failed to develop oil and had abandoned work on the well. Clark then executed a contract with his co-defendant Hercules Gasoline Company for the sale of the oil at a more favorable price than that covered by the Horwitz contract.

*433 The theory upon which the interveners came into the litigation was this: Horwitz had assigned to these interveners certain percentages “of the gross production of all the oil, gas and other hydrocarbon substances saved and sold from any well drilled” upon the premises. The proceeds of the sale of the oil produced were to be deposited in a Long Beach bank which was authorized to pay over to the interveners their proportional shares. Alleging that the defendant Clark was insolvent and that their damages for breach of their contracts could not be ascertained they prayed for the same injunctive relief sought by the plaintiff. In order to bring the cause within the equity jurisdiction of the court the plaintiff and the interveners pleaded that the defendant Clark was insolvent and that the failure of Clark to abide by the terms of his contract with plaintiff would result in irreparable damage to them. The plaintiff also alleged that, in reliance .upon the contract, it had installed expensive pipe-lines for conveying the oil from the premises. The trial court found that it was not true that defendant Clark was insolvent; it failed to find on plaintiff’s allegation that it made expenditures in reliance upon the contract, but all the evidence showed that the allegation was not true. It drew the conclusion of law that plaintiff and interveners would suffer irreparable damage because there was no way to ascertain the amount of compensation to afford them adequate relief.

On the appeal from the judgment in favor of the plaintiff the appellants insist that the oil company failed to present a case for equitable relief upon the contract because, 1, the contract did not create an interest in real property, and 2, it being merely an agreement to sell personal property which could not be specifically enforced the plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law for damages for the breach. Many assignments of error are also relied on but, as we are in accord with appellants in the two foregoing propositions, and, as the judgment must be reversed for that reason, we will not discuss the other assignments in so far as they relate to the plaintiff.

The theory upon which the plaintiff relies to maintain its claim that the contract created an interest in the land is that it established a “profit a prendreThe courts of this *434 state have never been in doubt about the true meaning and intent of the expression “profit á prendre”. Ruling Case Law defines it as “a right to take a part of the soil or produce of the land,” such as the right to take timber or coal, or to fish in the water of another. (9 R. C. L., p. 744.) It is distinguished from an easement, one of the features of which is the absence of all right to participate in the profits of the soil charged with it. A “profit & prendre” is considered an interest or an estate in the land itself and this is the principal feature which distinguishes it from a pure easement, which is a right or interest without profit. It is a right to take something out of the soil of another, as a right of common, and also some minor rights as a right to fish, hunt and hawk, or to mine metals, dig for oil; take oil from the land.

The feature of the right which is of interest to the point under consideration is that it creates an interest in the real property in the nature of a covenant running with the land as distinguished from a mere personal obligation of the owner of the realty. The underlying principle of the right is that it carries the right of entry and the right to remove and take from the land the designated product or “profit”. -A typical case is the right to cut and rem'ove standing timber and the right to mine and remove coal and other minerals. Thus, the common oil and gas lease under which the lessee is entitled to enter upon the land of the lessor and develop and remove oil or gas is a “profit a prendre”. The authorities are agreed on this principle, basing their reasoning on the ground that the oil and gas is a part of the realty and is real property until severed. Out of this rule has grown the further doctrine that there can be no grant or conveyance of óil ór gas in place separate and apart from the right "to go upon the premises and extract them. (1 Thornton’s Law of Oil and Gas, p. 148; Rich v. Doneghey, 71 Okl. 204 [3 A. L. R. 352, 177 Pac. 86, 90]; Campbell v. Smith, 180 Ind. 159 [101 N. E. 89].) There are exceptions to this rule found in the decisions coming from the states of Texas and Kentucky, where the courts have held that oil and gas in place are minerals subject to separate ownership, severance and sale in like manner as coal and other solid minerals (Stephen County v. Mid-Kansas Oil & Gas Co., 113 Tex. *435 160 [29 A. L. R. 566, 254 S. W. 290] ; United Fuel Gas Co. v. Swiss Oil Corp., 41 Fed. (2d) 4).

This difference of opinion as to the rights of the land owner in the oil and gas in place explains some of the authorities cited by respondent on the application of the.doctrine of “profit a prendre”-, but we have found the authorities agreed that these substances are a part of the realty until severed and brought under control, and that, when this has been done, they are personal property subject to sale as such. (Southwest Pipe Line Co. v. Empire Nat. Gas Co., 33 Fed. (2d) 248, 252 [64 A. L. R. 1229]; Ohio Oil Co. v. Indiana, 177 U. S. 190, 208 [44 L. Ed. 729, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 576, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].)

Under the contract upon which plaintiff relies the owner of the land agreed to sell to plaintiff all the crude petroleum produced

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 73, 112 Cal. App. 431, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richfield-oil-co-of-california-v-hercules-gasoline-co-calctapp-1931.